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So we dump a lot of money into my wife's 401k at work. When we first started I just let Fidelity pick the funds. Which was a bad idea. They were very conservative.
Two years ago I did a lot of research and set up the funds how I thought they should be set up for aggressive growth (we're in our early 30s). I looked for funds that had at least a 10%+ track record over 15-30 years. Other than the 20% or so I put in a large cap fund. I don't have much invested in bonds though, only about 6%.
Well 2 years ago, I had a 16% return for the year. Last year, I had 24%.
So far for this year, I'm at 2.5%. I'm happy with average over the 3 years, but this year sucks!
Is that just what's gonna happen with investing from time to time? Or should I consider moving some things around?
First, that is just what happens sometimes. Some years funds just underperform. You could reallocate, but the funds you move out of could very well overperform the next year. It is not about the year to year gain, it is about the long term gain.
Personally I am a HUGE fan of plain ole Index Funds. If your plan has the options I would use them. A mix of S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq, Euro 50, Hang Seng, Russel 2000, and maybe a bond index will perform very well. Basically you will track the general market for the lowest possible fees.
With a managed mutual fund you will pay 2-3 times in fees vs. an Indexed fund.
Second, you said you "let Fidelity choose your funds". Does that mean you just went with the "default" investment? (called a QDIO (qualified default investment option))
If so that is usually a very conservative option and not the best idea at all. That option is in place for protection of the plan sponsor (business).
The only other way that Fidelity would have chosen your funds would be if you chose for them to professionally manage your account under 3(21) Fiduciary Services. If you did that then you most likely had to fill out an investor profile, or either it was just an age based actively managed fund. It does not sound like an age based option since it was conservative and you are in your 30s... if you filled out an investor profile your wife might have done it and women usually are much more conservative than men.
If your funds have performed well, do not get discouraged by just one underperforming year. But do consider Index funds if they are available in the plan.
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